Yocheved Speaks
Miriam, my daughter
who first opened my womb
turning me into a mother,
I named you for the sea
I’d never seen,
my dream revealing
who you would be
a daughter of the waters,
she who draws out the bitter,
she who parts the sea.
Bruchat Hi, Blessed is she
sang Shifra and Puah
as I pushed and parted
the curtain between us
and first gazed into
the wells of your eyes.
On the banks of the river I taught you -
take comfort from the egret and heron
lifting above our constrictions,
where to find soothing herbs of chamomile,
aloe, to listen to our Mother Nile who daily reminds us
between the confines of two shores
is the ever changing flow that cannot be enslaved.
We bathed with Hebrew and Egyptian women,
even sometimes Pharaohs’ daughters,
taking off the clothing of slavery,
washing away edicts and divisions,
our long hair and limbs
weaving into one another
like luminous baskets.
You with a child’s gift for seeing
reminded us that God can be an ark
of love formed from mud and reed.
You brought the tools of the midwives -
the practice of listening, of waiting,
of finding a way through even when
any passage seemed impossible,
you who saved your brother
and your people from drowning.
We anointed and blessed you
at your first bleeding
while still slaves in Egypt
spreading oil of frankincense and myrrh
over your brown skin, wove
henna through your hair,
naming you as midwife,
keeper of the well, prophet
of the poem and dance.
I was there by your side my daughter
as we crossed remembering
Pharaoh’s daughter and our sisters of the river.
When the sea drowned the men of Egypt
you sang a song of grief for their fallen
sons and husbands, you of the heart
larger than any one people
or sea.
Thankyou for this beautiful poem Elana, I guessed but had to look up Yocheved – so I learn something more and I am grateful.